William Hague visits In Mogadisho
Mogadishu (RBC) William Hague today called for a stepping up of the fight against Somali-based terrorism as he became the first British foreign secretary to visit the war-torn state for 20 years.
His arrival in the capital Mogadishu amid tight security marked the start of a major diplomatic push to bring stability to a country he described as “the world’s most failed state”.
Mr Hague said recent gains by the 10,000-strong African Union force in the country (Amisom) had driven back the radical Islamist group al Shabaab from the capital.
But with much of the south of the country still controlled by the organisation, which has links to al Qaida, he said there must be no let-up in the pressure.
“We need to step this up. We are not complacent about it,” he said.
Britain is hosting a major conference on Somalia in London later this month, attended by representatives of 50 nations in international organisations.
Mr Hague promised that counter-terrorism would be high on the agenda as well as tackling piracy and Somalia’s deep humanitarian problems.
“For the security of the UK, it matters a lot for Somalia to become a more stable place,” he said.
“Some progress has been made on this, partly because of the progress of the Amisom force.
“One of the objectives of our conference in London is to strengthen counter-terrorism co-operation to make it easier for countries in this region to disrupt terrorist networks, to disrupt their financing and the movement of potential terrorists.”
In 2010, MI5 director-general Jonathan Evans warned that it was “only a matter of time” before terrorists trained in Somali camps inspired acts of violence on the streets of the UK.
However, ministers believe the success of the Amisom offensive last August in driving al Shabaab from Mogadishu has opened up a window of opportunity.
At his meeting with Somali president Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, Mr Hague announced the appointment of Matt Baugh as Britain’s first ambassador to the country since it collapsed into chaos and civil war in 1991.
He also confirmed his intention to establish a new British embassy in Mogadishu once the security situation allows.
For now, however, with suicide bombings, improvised explosive devices and grenade attacks still a regular occurrence, Mr Baugh will work out of the British High Commission in neighbouring Kenya.
The volatile security situation meant that Mr Hague’s 10-minute drive from the Amisom base at the city’s airport to the presidential residence at Villa Somalia had to be made in a small fleet of heavily-protected armoured vehicles.
The route took him past shops and buildings bearing the scars of two decades of conflict, including the country’s bombed-out parliament building.
However, observers in the city say there are new signs of life emerging from the rubble since Amisom’s August offensive, with businesses opening up, buildings being repaired and people and traffic returning to the streets.
The London conference will also consider practical steps strengthened the site against Somali pirates and improving humanitarian co-ordination for the one million refugees in the region displaced by famine.
Source: http://www.independent.co.uk/
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As questions are invited by British Government Consultations on Somalia:
Sir,
A question about a proposed two-step Roadmap for lasting peace and development on the Horn: http://www.hornpeace.webs.com:
Could the UK have the courage of trying to initiate something which may appear to be “the impossible or at least not right now” but without which the alternative can be the usual chain of total wastes one after the other as before and into the future, that is: (1) Re-unifying the five Somali parts into which colonialism divided the Somali nation in a federal system with rotating presidency and prime minister and a centrally located new Capital city, and (2) Creating a common market for the resultant new Horn of Africa region, (Federal Republic of Somalia, Kenya and Ethiopia, as Djibouti would become a state in the Federal Republic of Somalia) – a market in which citizens would fish and farm together?
For more about the proposed Roadmap please visit the site above.